book chapter

The Russia-Ukraine war's impact on global food markets: A historical perspective

by Joseph W. Glauber,
David Laborde Debucquet and
Johan Swinnen
Publisher(s): international food policy research institute (ifpri)
Open Access | CC BY-4.0
Citation
Glauber, Joseph W.; Laborde Debucquet, David; and Swinnen, Johan. 2023. The Russia-Ukraine war's impact on global food markets: A historical perspective. In The Russia-Ukraine Conflict and Global Food Security. Section One: A Conflict with Global Consequences, Chapter 3, Pp. 18-23. https://doi.org/10.2499/9780896294394_03

The Russia-Ukraine war has focused global attention on the key economic roles those countries play as major exporters of agricultural commodities. Over the 2019–2021 period, they accounted for 12% of global agricultural trade on a kilocalorie basis, with a combined market share of 34% for wheat, 26% for barley, 17% for maize, and 75% for sunflower oil. The war has scrambled this picture, with Ukraine’s exports falling dramatically, and Russia’s falling, then recovering. While the Black Sea region has historically been a major grain producer, its emergence as a major world exporting region is a relatively recent phenomenon. From the 1970s until the early 2000s — the decades immediately before and after the collapse of the Soviet Union — Russia and Ukraine were net grain importers. This post examines how and why Russia and Ukraine became such important factors in 21st century global food markets — and thus why the war poses a continuing threat to global food security.

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